2. With fur coats

These allied prisoners of war at Schneidemuhl POW Camp in Posen include Private Robert Montgomery of Auburn, NSW (centre). He was captured in France in July 1916 and spent time in several POW camps. He wrote about his sore back and about the concerts for both Christmas and New Year, which he said “relieve the general monotony of camp life”.

3. With cats and music

Those soldiers captured by the enemy and held in POW camps were also able to celebrate Christmas in some way, as shown in his postcard photograph. It was sent to the Australian Red Cross in London by Private Herbert Ernest Murphy from Wellington, NSW. Private Murphy, who is probably standing in the back row to the right of the Christmas tree, was captured at Reincourt, France, on April 11, 1917. He was eventually released and returned to Australia in June 1919.

4. With too much to drink

This soldier was photographed on Christmas Day in 1915 clutching a bottle, with another in his pocket. According to the caption on this photo, this soldier returned from Cairo with balloons tied all around the mail wagon he was teetering on.

5. With a biscuit

Fittingly, it was Sergeant Cecil Robert Christmas of the 5th Field Ambulance who used this hard tack biscuit as a postcard home. In barely discernible writing in graphite pencil or black ink, are the words “M[erry] Christ[mas] … Prosperous New Y[ear] from old friends Anzac Gallipoli 1915”.

6. By sending postcards

Embroidered silk postcards were extremely popular with soldiers during World War I and thousands were sent home to mothers, wives, children and sweethearts. The cards carried a range of motifs or patriotic themes and were hand-embroidered by French and Belgian women.

7. By being very neat and orderly

This ward at the No 1 Australian Auxiliary Hospital in Middlesex, England, was decorated with a Santa Claus and a large map of Australia on the rear wall and the word “HOME” on it in large letters. However, it does not look as though the festivities have yet started.

8. With packages from home

These gift boxes were issued by the Australian Red Cross Society. This one was collected by John Patrick Kelly, a labourer from Murphy’s Creek in Victoria. During the evacuation of Gallipoli in December 1915, Kelly was one of 16 men chosen to remain behind to hold the right flank of Lone Pine.

9. With an outdoor picnic

The negative for this photo of a group of soldiers with their Christmas lunch was one of 89 found in a “Welcome Nugget” tobacco tin on the body of Gunner Maurice Charles Thompson, who served in Egypt, Belgium and France. He took his photographs using a Kodak Vest Pocket Autographic camera but died in France on April 29, 1918.

10. With a gift from a princess

This gift tin was given to all British, Commonwealth and Empire soldiers serving on Christmas Day, 1914. Princess Mary, daughter of King George V and Queen Mary, was behind a public appeal to ensure “every sailor afloat and every soldier at the front” received a Christmas present. The box would have contained a greeting card, a small pencil shaped like a .303 bullet and some cigarettes.

11. With lots of tea

The Alexandra Club, a private club for women based in Melbourne, instigated a program providing billies to private citizens in Australia to fill with gifts for soldiers at Gallipoli. By September 1915, almost 20,000 had been distributed, according to The Argus newspaper.